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A contagious motherhood

· Mass at Santa Marta ·

Sept. 15, 2015

In a seemingly “orphaned” world there is
hope for a “contagious motherhood” that brings acceptance, tenderness and
forgiveness. During Mass at Santa Marta on Tuesday, 15 September, the Feast of
Our Lady of Sorrows, in the presence of the Council of Cardinals, Pope Francis
reflected on the motherhood of Mary and of the Church which, without such a
feature, would be reduced to being merely “a rigid organization”. The Pontiff
began his meditation from a passage of the Gospel according to John — “Woman,
behold, your son!”, followed by words to the disciple, “Behold, your mother!”
(19:25-27). He emphasized that “it is the second time that Mary hears ‘woman’
from her Son”. The first, of course, is at Cana when Jesus says to his mother:
“My hour has not yet come”; the second is this time, at the foot of the Cross,
when he assigns to her another son.

It
should be noted that “the first time she hears the word” from Jesus, she takes
the situation in hand, saying to the servants: “Do whatever he tells you”. This
time, instead, it is Jesus who takes charge: “Woman, your son”. And in that
moment, Francis said, Mary “once again becomes a mother”. Her motherhood
“extends to the figure of that new son, it extends to all the Church and to all
mankind”. And we, today, cannot “think of Mary without considering her as
Mother”. And in this time, the Pontiff said, of a perceived feeling of
“orphanhood”, this word “has great importance”. Jesus tells us: “I will not
leave you orphaned, I give you a mother”. This legacy is also “our pride: we
have a mother, who is with us, protects us, accompanies us, helps us, even in
difficult times, in bad moments”.

To
better explain this consideration, the Pope recalled the tradition of the
ancient Russian monks, those who “in times of spiritual turmoil”, say that we
must take refuge “under the mantle of the Holy Mother of God”. The advice is
confirmed in the “first Marian antiphon in Latin: Sub tuum praesidium
confugimus”; in this first prayer we find the “mother who accepts us, protects
us and takes care of us”. But, the Pope added, “we can also say that this
motherhood of Mary goes beyond” that, and is “contagious”. Indeed, returning to
the meditations of Isaac, the ancient “Abbot of the Monastery of Stella”, we
can understand that in addition to the “motherhood of Mary” there is also “a
second motherhood”, that of “our ‘holy mother Church’, which engenders us in
baptism, enables us to grow in her community” and has the very attitudes of
motherhood: “meekness and goodness: mother Mary and mother Church know how to
caress their children, they give tenderness”.

It
is an essential characteristic, Francis pointed out. Thinking of the Church
without this motherhood is like thinking of “a rigid organization, an
organization without human warmth, orphaned”. The Church, however, “is mother
and accepts us as a mother: mother Mary, mother Church”. That’s not all. Isaac
the Abbot adds yet another detail which, the Pope explained, might “shock” us:
“even our soul is mother”, there is even present within us a motherhood “that
is expressed in the attitudes of humility, acceptance, understanding, goodness,
forgiveness and tenderness”.

Each
of these forms of motherhood comes straight from the “words of Jesus to his mother”
who was at the foot of the Cross. And, the Pope explained, where there is
motherhood “there is life, there is joy, there is peace, one grows in peace”.
On the contrary, when it is lacking, there remains only “that rigidity, that
discipline” and, he added, “one doesn’t know how to smile”. The Pontiff then
suggested “one of the most beautiful and human things”, which “is to smile at a
child and make him smile”.

Applying
his meditation to the Eucharistic celebration, the Pontiff concluded: “Now we
commemorate the Cross, Jesus comes here and once again renews his sacrifice for
us and his Mother”, in the Eucharistic sacrament, he explained. Both of them
are present “although in different ways: his mother spiritually and he
actually”. Francis prayed that, at the moment when “once again he offers
himself to the Father for us”, the Lord “may make us feel even today” those
words: “Son, behold your mother!”.